Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Paul Jacob :: Townhall.com Columnist
Parking pork in the impound lot?
by Paul Jacob
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


The Democrats took over Congress pledging to curb the practice of earmarks.

They didn't quite succeed.

The omnibus spending bill they produced in December was filled with spending projects of a less-than-national character, most seen by no congressperson but the original politician who placed it in the bill. How many of these earmarks? Nine thousand or more, hitting over 11,000 for the year.

So, just another sad story of fiscal irresponsibility?

No. The story doesn't end when Congress cooks up a bill and sends it to the White House. And this time out there's a wrinkle in the politics of it all.

Sometime back Senator Jim DeMint asked Congress's research organization to prepare a report on the legality of these earmarks, and on the legality of the Executive Branch just ignoring them.

The researchers' verdict? Since most of this pork barrel spending is placed not in the bill itself, but in subsidiary explanatory reports, their status as law falls way short of constitutionality.

So the president could easily issue an Executive Order instructing his underlings simply to ignore the earmarks. They weren't placed in the omnibus bill as real laws, so it would be just fine to disregard them as the extra-legal finaglings they are.

This is not a veto. According to this line of research, most earmarks do not rise to the level of legality to require a veto. The proper response to off-the-books faux-authorizations to spend? A studied snubbing of each offending earmark.

It's not just DeMint's office that has counseled this course. A coalition of taxpayer organizations has urged the president to work up a little backbone and stand up to the spendthrifts in Congress. The groups sent a letter to the president, demanding . . . er, asking that he

follow through by issuing an executive order formally directing all Federal agencies to ignore non-legislative earmarks tucked into committee reports and statements of managers. Such an action is within your Constitutional powers, and would strike a blow for fiscal responsibility now while setting a valuable precedent for the future.

This became a big issue in late December. Mark Tapscott, editorial page editor of The Washington Examiner, alerted his readers to the issue repeatedly; there was great Internet buzz. But the buzz didn't yield an immediate and unequivocal response from the White House.

What the president is thinking, I don't know. He's played mum. But there's certainly been talk about this behind the scenes. A lot of people hope to hear something from Jim Nussle, Director of the Office of Management and Budget, "any day now."

Though anti-pork activists hailed the idea, Democrats have described it as all-out war between the branches of government.

And they have a point. The president, with his rash and too-frequent use of "signing statements," has not put himself in an ideal position to take on Congress, should congressional Democrats actually decide to defend their spending prerogatives, as they conceive them.

Further, the whole situation is eerily reminiscent of Nixon's latter days. Nixon also faced a Democratic Congress. And that Congress also spent money like a house afire. So he did the only responsible thing: he impounded increasing amounts of money that Congress directed be spent.

Impoundment seems ancient history now. In Nixon's time it was tradition and a live option. Thomas Jefferson had used it (he refused to spend money on building a navy, for instance; waste of money, he thought). And presidents had taken it as their duty from those days onward. If Congress couldn't control itself, and authorized money to be spent on this or that, the president, within his rights, simply didn't spend the money, "impounding" it, sending it back to Treasury coffers.

So the Democrats of Nixon's day cooked up a response. Nixon was weak, because of his extralegal activities vis-à-vis Watergate, and the Democrats concocted, as a cruel revenge, one of the worst bits of legislation in the history of the republic: 1974's Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act. Congress basically stripped the Executive Branch of the power to not spend money. And then, in the budget portion of the act, fixed the books with Enronesque flair, just so they could get away with spending money at an even greater clip.

Thus was sealed the fate of fiscal responsibility in the United States.

The Republicans never bothered, in their 1994 Contract-With-America heyday, to repeal the awful 1974 act, which would have given back the president something like a line-item veto on spending, and which would have brought honesty back into accounting.

And so they lost their grip. And now they gripe.

And offer council of political war.

If it's war, the first casualty would be wasteful spending, and on that subject, I am a hawk.

But I am curious what the second and third casualties would be.

Taking a larger view, the best thing to happen would for Congress to come clean, no longer earmark bills for spending projects, and go back to fiscal responsibility and full disclosure as the only honorable way to conduct the affairs of state.

But it didn't happen when the GOP got its taste for power, and the Democrats don't seem inclined to do the right thing, either.

So, will this president dare write up the Executive Order to ignore Congress's hidden, shameful spending?

Perhaps more importantly, would any of the Wannabes currently running for the office take up the cause?

It might be worth asking them.

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
Paul Jacob is President of Citizens in Charge. His daily Common Sense commentary appears on the Web, via e-mail, and on radio stations across America.
 
TOWNHALL DAILY: Sign up today and receive Townhall.com daily lineup delivered each morning to your inbox.
No, no and again no.
No Congress will not change.
No the spending will continue.
No the president will do nothing about it.

The wannabees running for President
are all vested in this corruption. Only a Mayor or Govenor would speak out against this.

why not??
And if not, will Prez George give a reason?

Look to the political
and financial supporters of each...

Anti-pork group releases list of earmark
How can we afford this?

Politico-There’s no bridge to nowhere in the Labor Health and Human Services spending bill, but there’s plenty of fodder for the anti-earmark crusaders.

The anti-pork group Citizens Against Government Waste has released a handy database of all 2,243 earmarks in the Labor Health and Human Services appropriations bill that was vetoed by President Bush earlier this month. The spreadsheet organizes the earmarks by dollar amount, the project and indicates which lawmakers requested the money.

The group highlights earmarks like the $500,000 for the Andre Agassi Preparatory Academy in Las Vegas and over $800,000 for abstinence programs in Pennsylvania. But CAGW does acknowledge that Labor Health and Human Services bill this year has a 41 percent decrease in spending for earmarks and 27 percent fewer projects.

Despite Bush’s veto, many of the projects will likely remain in the annual spending bills.

READ MORE

http://controlcongress.com/uncategorized/anti-pork-group-re leases-list-of-earmarks

And On The Way To The Pork Forum
The beginning chapter in the Jorge Bush presidency starts with the joining at the hip with Red Nose Kennedy. From that moment, it was downhill. But look at the number of education people and organizations that are now supporting the Republicans. I do not remember any, do you? Who reaped the harvest? Democrats. Jorge's open border -- look who gets the votes for that. Bigger government -- winner is Democrat. Jorge's tax cut. Without the swap with Demos like Kennedy, Jorge would not have gotten the cut. Look what the cut has gotten the Republicans -- criticism and switch of votes towards Democrats. Jorge's legacy -- works well with the Council on Foreign Relations, open borders, a perceived tax cut for the rich, an invader of a country without provocation, cannot talk clearly, etc. GEORGE WILL is on the members list of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Earmark rejection
Yesterday I received two different requests from the House leadership requesting that 1) I fill out a survey, and 2) that I contribute to the House coffers to assist in the upcoming elections.

For both I gladly filled out the survey. But where it came to filling out the info for the contribution, I remarked:

I will no longer contribute to any GOP
group or member of the House or Senate
until such time as the GOP renounces pork
barrel spending and the practice of earmark.

It is time that members of Congress listen

Let's ask Fred

Wonderful article - please keep hmmering the subject and the solution.

Paul
peso george has pork he wants to keep. Why should he worry about theirs? And try to ask them to spend a little on a fence for security, and they not only go frugal when it’s appropriated, they turn around and GUT it when they think no one is looking.

http://www.immigrationshumancost.org/text/crimevictims.htm l
Free Ramos and Compean
If we can’t have HOME SECURITY first, the rest just won’t matter!
http://fred08.com/
http://vets4fred.net/
NO MORE HOLDING OUR NOSE AND PULLING THAT LEVER!!
VOTE FOR A REAL REPUBLICAN!! NO MORE RINO’s!!!

Dealing with earmarks
Just yesterday I received two different requests to fill out political surveys/contribute money to the House GOP coffers.

I quickly filled out the surveys (they actually had a deadline on your response), and where it come to filling in the info for the contribution, I wrote:

"I will never again contribute to the coffers of either the House or Senate, or individual members, until such time as they totally denounce earmark spending.

It is time that you, the House/Senate member realize that you are no more than 'hired' hands, and thus need to comply with the wishes of the vast majority of your 'employers', or face the consequences of no money/no office."

I firmly believe that similar messages/methods towards the members of both houses is the only way that we are ever get this wasteful practice stopped - certainly, only a few will do it on their own!


A deeper look
Maybe the Prez doesn't have to take official action like issuing an EO...he just has to let it be known, through channels to agency heads, that spending for earmarked items is discourgaed. That would let him off the hook and place the program managers in the unenviable position of justifying the diversion of earmarked funds to legislatively but underfunded mandated programs.

look in the mirror
It is so irritating to listen to the whining about congressional spending. Why don't you remove your heads from the dark place and face the fact it is our fault, not theirs.
We keep putting these idiots in office. Look at the primaries, less than 10% of the people even bother to participate. All the big spenders just keep getting elected time and time again. Until we decide to pay attention and bring accountability to Washington we have no right to complain.
Instead of blaming Washington take a good look in the mirror. We are the problem! Until we quit sending the pork kings back to Washington we deserve to be taxed and spent into poverty.

her name
Calll her Nancy Ex-pelosi-ve.

Monies not legally inside nblls
should not be spent. Period.

Repubs. should never ally with Dems. to be bi-partisan as it NEVER works.

Reagan got taken by Kennedy in 1986 over the last amnesty bill. Dole and Bush I got taken in 1991 on disabilities. Bush II got s*cker punched by Kennedy (again) with No Child Left Behind, an act that has doubled fed. spending on ed. every year since 2000 and has generated nothing but NEA hatred of Bush by "educators". McCain has damaged himself with the idiot Feingold campaign "reform" nonsense that violates the first amendment and created the monster 527s that threaten GOP candidates.

Some people never learn.


SEGREGATE THE PORK FROM THE PITH
Mr. Jacob's column was great. If only the Republican Presidential hopefuls even get a hint of it, it may light a fire under one of them. Heaven knows a fire needs to be lit someplace. Preferably frying pork.

Then the "pith" of a bill can be signed with a clean conscience by any President.

Separation of Powers
According to that quaint utmoded "C" document, the legislative authority generally, & the authority to appropriate funds in particular, are vested in Congress. The executive authority, which would serve to implement what Congress has authorized, lies w/ the President.

An appropriations bill could be seen as permission to spend, rather than a positive order to spend, much less the act of spending per se. It would be the task of the executive to perform the act of spending. If the executive declines to do the spending that the legislative body has permitted, on the grounds the spending is unconstitutional, is the exec usurping the authority of the legislature to affirmatively direct the spending? Or, by forcing the exec to spend, is the legislature usurping executive authority?

Would the President be violating the Constitution by implementing unConstitutional spending?

Has the "Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act" ever been tested in a court case?

I can of course see downsides to 'impoundment': the President in effect becomes final authority on spending, & that power could (& had been)used to coerce individual Congresspersons.

But then again, that power is so fearsome precisely because Congress spends so much on so many things arguably not the place of the federal gvmt.

The Supreme Court, early on, (forget the case cite) refused to intervene in disputes about federal spending. That's one reason for the current mess. If the President (or anyone else) could challenge the Constitutionality of federal spending in court, there's be a lot less of it. If Congress' recourse in case of impoundment was to sue in federal court, they'd have to prove the spending was kosher. Funny how out of all the matters the federal courts have taken it upon themselves to decide for us, they punt on that one vitally important one.

I am astounded by this news.
This is the first time I have heard that these earmarks are being added after the bills are passed and have not actually been voted on. Isn’t that illegal? Why hasn’t one of these anti-pork organizations sued the government for this? Why do we need to wait on free-spender George to do something?

The other big question is why hasn’t this been disseminated by the new media?

Don't you love Pork?
And this is "The most Ethical Congress in History" too!

But as a previous poster noted pretty clearly, it's Our fault, we keep voting these nimrods back into office.

To Paraphrase Hillary. "We need to take away endless terms for their own good"


We're Doomed
There is only one candidate with the cajones to stand up to Congress and "JUST SAY NO" to all this expensive pork.

I think you already know who I'm talking about. I won't mention his name for fear of being shouted out of the room.

Unfortunately, he has little chance of winning. So, we'll just keep whining.

Get real, folks
Jacob's article and a few of the deluded TH members seem to think that the new Democrat takeover of the Congress is the cause of pork barrel spending. Are you all out of your minds?

And Uncle Alby, though you didn't mention him for fear of being shouted out..........you need to do your homework as your UNNAMED Senator who always votes AGAINST earmarks is probably the biggest beneficiary of nearly all Congresspersons. Perhaps you haven't seen his endless earmarks, his signature is on far too many of them to be repeated here.

The value of our US dollar tanked well before Pelosi & her gang unseated the spenders who wore an R after their names, let's get real and point the finger where it belongs.




IF a publicly traded corporation
used the same accounting standards that the Feds use, not only would its trading be suspended, but the CEO and CFO would likely find themselves going into the big house for a few years.

Politicians are held to a different standard - sub-standard, that is. If a CEO took payments that he called "advertising contributions" from outsiders, and then subsequently sent his benefactors astronomical sums of money, he would also be facing some prison time.

The system is broken, probably to the point that it can never be fixed.

pjal - - -
"you need to do your homework as your UNNAMED Senator who always votes AGAINST earmarks is probably the biggest beneficiary of nearly all Congresspersons. Perhaps you haven't seen his endless earmarks, his signature is on far too many of them to be repeated here."

I haven't the foggiest notion who you're talking about.

My guy isn't a senator.

Jackpine Savage -- Voting in Nimrods
"But as a previous poster noted pretty clearly, it's Our fault, we keep voting these nimrods back into office."

That's coz we are the BENEFICIARIES of this pork.

We're mad at Congress for wasting money buying pork on other people, but we're love our own individual congress-critter for bringing home the bacon.

Pork bribes us for votes. Apparently, it works.

Uncle Alby
Perhaps it's because I've seen his name so much that I was thinking of Ron Paul. To put actions into words, here's a glimpse of his pork barrel requests.......

http://i.cnn.net/cnn/interactive/allpolitics/0706/popup.con gress.earmarks/pdfs/tx.14.paul.pdf

Uncle Alby re UNNAMED
My mistake was in conferring Senatorial status to Ron Paul, the biggest hypocrite in the House who VOTES against earmarks while loading pork on the Texas plate as indicated in my prior posts, backed up with facts......

http://i.cnn.net/cnn/interactive/allpolitics/0706/popup.co n gress.earmarks/pdfs/tx.14.paul.pdf

My apologies for the confusion but I hope you're now more enlightened and will recognize him for what he DOES, not what he SAYS.

pjal
We REPS are putting the blame where it belongs.
You LIBS won on REPS overspending an I for one know that you are NOT referring to the REPS as the problem especially when we watched your fearless leaders NANCY P and Harry Reid get on the TUBE and DECLARE THAT THERE WAS A NEW CONGRESS IN TOWN. We where suppose to see a cleaned up Congress but it doesnt look like that to me. Thats the problem with LIBS when you fail at something you always blame something or someone else and that isnt working no more. You may have stated that you are cleaning up Congress but sliding in all that PORK after the BILL has Passed is just another way for you to BEAT THE SYSTEM that you clainm the REPS abused.
The Congress changed alright but the PORK spending didnt they only changed from a (R) TO A (D) IN FRONT OF THEIR NAMES.

pjal -- re Unnamed CongressCritter
Well lets look at it this way.

If every congressperson did it this way, our spending would be next to zip. I.e., vote for pork in one's own district, then vote against pork in every other district, unless it's necessary and Constitutional. Pork would come to a complete stop.

They'd actually need to justify bills based on what's actually necessary and Constitutional, or they'd never see the light of day. Big difference over what happens now.

What happens now is what's called "log-rolling." They get together and vote for each other's pork. "You for mine, and I'll vote for yours."

Our unnamed congressman doesn't play that game.

You can call him a hypocrite if you like, but it's the kind of hypocracy that I wish all the others would emulate. It would save this country from itself.
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.